Serbian Clitic Word Order: The Second-Position Rule
If one thing instantly marks you as a fluent Serbian speaker, it's putting the little unstressed words in the right spot. These clitics — sam, si, je, se, me, ga, mu and friends — can't stand alone and can't start a clause. They lean on the first stressed word and land in second position, which is why you say "Video sam ga" and never "Sam ga video." Start with something else and they jump: "Juče sam ga video." When several pile up, the order is locked: li, then the auxiliary, then dative, then accusative, then se, with je sneaking to the very end. That's how you build "Dao sam mu je," "Kako se zoveš?" and "Da li si ga video?" Nail the slot and the rhythm clicks into place.
Examples
- Dao sam mu je. I gave it to him.
- Kako se zoveš? What's your name?
- Da li si ga video? Did you see him?
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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Say „Sam ga video“ and everyone hears you're not local. These tiny words — sam, ga, se — have a secret spot in the sentence. Hit it, and you sound fluent even as a beginner.
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Here's the deal. Serbian has a pile of unstressed little words — they're called clitics: sam, si, je, ću, se, me, te, ga, mi, ti, mu. They can't be said on their own; they lean on the word in front of them. That's why they follow a strict rule about where they stand.
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Here's the heart of the whole rule. A clitic is never the first word in a sentence. It leans on the first stressed word or phrase and lands right after it — in second position. That's why Serbs say „Video sam ga“, and never „Sam ga video“.
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Look at the simplest case. The past tense of „videti“ needs the auxiliary „sam“. It can't start the sentence — it goes after the first word, the participle: Video sam ga. „I saw him.“ First „video“, then „sam“, then „ga“. The clitics stick into second position, right after the first word.
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Now watch the clitic jump when the sentence starts with something else. Begin with „juče“ and that word is first — so „sam ga“ stick right behind it: Juče sam ga video. „I saw him yesterday.“ Now „juče“ is the first word, so the clitics jump to second position, far from the verb „video“. Second position follows the first word, whatever it is.
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So what happens when several clitics pile up at once? Then they follow a strict, fixed order. First the question word „li“. Then the auxiliary „biti“ — sam, si, smo — except the form „je“. Then the dative: mi, ti, mu, joj. Then the accusative: me, te, ga, je. Then „se“. And at the very end, „je“.
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Let's assemble the whole cluster. You want to say „Dao sam mu je“ — gave the book to him. The order is locked: first the auxiliary „sam“, then the dative „mu“, then the accusative „je“: Dao sam mu je. „I gave it to him.“ The auxiliary, then who — „mu“, then what — „je“. Never the other way. That order is fixed and can't be changed.
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See „se“ in action. Reflexive verbs need „se“, which also goes in second position. When you ask someone their name: Kako se zoveš? „What's your name?“ First „kako“, then „se“ in second position, then the verb. Not „Kako zoveš se“ — „se“ can't go at the end.
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Now a question with the particle „li“. It always opens the clitic cluster. „Da li si ga video?“ — the order is „li“, then the auxiliary „si“, then the accusative „ga“: Da li si ga video? „Did you see him?“ „Da“ is the first word, then „li“, then „si“, then „ga“. The whole cluster in order: question, then biti, then object. That's how you build a past-tense question.
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One important catch — the form „je“. That „je“ from „biti“ is the only exception: it doesn't go at the start of the cluster but at the very end. So: Dala mu se je. But in everyday speech „se je“ blends together, so you'll more often hear „Dala mu se“. Just remember: the auxiliary „je“ comes last in the cluster, after everything else.
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Now the main trap — the reason you're here. Don't start a sentence with a clitic. „Sam ga video“ is wrong because „sam“ can't be first. It must come after the first stressed word: „Video sam ga“.
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Another common mistake — ordering the cluster by English logic. You think „gave him it“ and say „Dao sam je mu“. Wrong: the dative always comes before the accusative. First who, then what: Dao sam mu je.
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Let's recap. Clitics — sam, je, se, mu, ga — are never first; they take second position, after the first word. When there are several, the order is locked: „li“, then biti, then dative, then accusative, then „se“, then „je“ at the end. „Video sam ga“, „Dao sam mu je“. Hit that spot and you'll sound like a real Serb.